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January 19, 1947 - Image 4

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Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1947-01-19

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THE MICHIGAN DAILY

'Political

rHERE HAS BEEN concern expressed by
students who claim that the University
is thwarting their efforts to bring "political
speakers" to the campus. %
One group holds that "if a man holds po-
litical office at the time he is asked to speak,
it is virtually impossible to get permission
for him to speak on campus."
Whether or not the student feeling is
well-founded, it seems appropriate to clar-
ify existing rulings on the matter-if only
to give student groups an idea of whom
to see and what to expect when making
requests for "political speakers."
Board of Regents-approved regulations
read:
"The Comr ' on University lectures
shall have ju i: Lion over all public lee-
tures and adirm s to be held in the Uni-
versity."
"The policy of the Board of Regents is
to encourage the timely and rational dis-
cussion of topics whereby the ethical and
intellectual development of the student body
and the general welfare of the public may
be promoted."

Speakers
"In furtherance of this policy, the use of
University lecture rooms and auditoriums
may be granted to recognized student organ-
izations for meetings or for lectures on top-
ics of the day under guaranty that during
such meetings or lectures, there shall be
no violation of the recognized rules of hos-
pitality nor advocacy of the subversion of
the government of the United States nor
of the State, and that such meetings and
lectures shall be in the spirit and expression
worthy of the University."
"No addresses shall be allowed which urge
the destruction or modification of govern-
ment by violence or other unlawful methods
or which advocate or justify conduct which
violates fundamentals of our accepted code
of morals."
"Speeches in support of particular can-
didates of any political party or faction
shall not be permitted."
"Any recognized student organization, de-
siring the use of a lecture room or auditor-
ium shall first apply at the Office of the
Dean of Students for a certificate to the
effect that the organization is duly recog-
nized by the University. If the Dean of Stu-
dents finds that the intended use involves
a public lecture or address, he shall refer
the application to the Committee on Uni-
versity lectures; if he finds that other use is
intended, he shall determine whether or not
such use is consistent with the policies here-
inbefore expressed and he shall act on the
request."
-Milt Freudenheim

Editorials published in The Michigan Daily
are written by members of The Daily staff
anid represent the views of the writers only
NIGHT EDITOR: NATALIE BAGROW

MAN TO MAN:

Divide and Conquer

DOMINIE Sa p:
MEMBERS OF OUR most ancient pro-
fession will be guests of the University
this week. The ministry comes down to us
as the priest and family doctor. First tech-
nicians for families, he was keeper of the
sacred moments in a community, judge,
social leader. As chaplain over such cru-
cial stages as birth, confirmation, engage-
ment, marriage, sickness, this man keeps
the ideal in general thought. This is the
office laymen welcome as "The Cloth". His-
torically, there stands the clergyman. But
what a limited leader today, you say
Yes, today, he is one of a long list of pro-
fessionally trained men and women. The
attorney, the engineer, the public health
expert, the social worker, the public ac-
countant, the school teachers, the business
executive, and a variety of more recent pro-
fessional men have whittled away that orig-
inal profession. As we have evolved from
tribal life to the metropolitan city civiliza-
tion, we have directly added to the minis-
terial office many technical aids. But in-
advertently have we not robbed him of the
very sacredness, sensitivity, faith, sense of
personal worth, and definite dedication to
God which is essential for his success and
our welfare? Progress, yes, in analysis.
There may have been an unnecessary retro-
gresion in synthesis.
The events which absorb the minister of
religion are challenging. At the altar he
stands as the vicar of God. By ceremony,
art, prayer, and sacrifice he sets before wor-
shipping man some hint as to the inten-
tion of the Deity. God's love for man, the
cost of human choice to God, man's destiny
as a human soul, and the obligations of
man in the midst of good or evil, pleasure
or pain, virtue or vice, life or death, are the
themes on which he must preach. Meeting
families within their inner fastnesses, he
is a pastor. Where youth promises "I take
Thee, Mary, to be my wedded wife, to have
and to hold from this time forth, . . . and
forsaking all other . . . to love and to cher-
ish so long as we both shall live", he sym-
bolizes the Deity. Marriage by the church
is a Sacrament. Men consecrated and
trained for this profession gather reverent-
ly this week to question their own fitness
and to inquire into the culture. They may
well do so as they gather in Ann Arbor, for
last year there were as many divorces in
our county of Washtenaw as marriages.
Not until that reverent relation to life
which we expect of the minister at ordin-
ation can be developed in every lay lead-
er; will these ministers enjoy the partner-
ship they merit. If the pastor is to be
able to preside over the last rites of citi-
zens with ability to use the ritual, "The
Lord gave; the Lord hath taken,-blessed
be the name of the Lord", it will be ne-
cessary in our Western culture to exalt ev-
ery profession, each station of leadership,
all business transactions, and the very tex-
ture of our civilization to the high level
reached by the office of rabbi, priest, and
pastor in life at its best and in literature.
Every alumnus and students should re-
call this week that Michigan began in De-
troit in 1817, when a Protestant clergyman,
John Monteith, and a Catholic priest, Ga'
briel Richard, were named president and
vice president, and that both Tappan and
Haven, the first presidents in Ann Arbor,
were of this profession. No less than four
hundred graduates from Ann Arbor, sent
into the ministry at home and missionary
labors afar, are the earnest of our debt to
clergymen who serve in our state and the
thousands of worshipping parents who con-
stitute Religious Communities.

By HAROLD L. ICKES
T HE LIBERALS WHO, under the name
"Americans for Democratic Action,"
took such a firm stand at their meeting in
Washington on January 4,pretty effectively
cut the ground out from under the feet of
the Henry A. Wallace liberal group (Pro-
gressive Citizens of America) that had met
in New York a week earlier. The Progressive
Citizens of America in New York tried to eat
their cake and have it too, something that
it is pretty hard to do. They either lacked'
the sagacity to recognize the problem that
the communists have created for liberalism
or the courage to apply curative surgery.
Liberals or progressives whichever they may
care to call themselves, who want neither
part nor parcel with Communism, even in
a diluted form, will now know with which
of these two groups to ally themselves, pro-
vided, of course, that they will want to join
either. Some will elect to remain aloof from
both groups, until they can be certain that
they can be as free from party machine
domination as they are from communistic
penetration.
The question remains whether Americans
for Democratic Action, which was launched
with the blessing of Mrs. Franklin D. Roos-
evelt, is an organization within the Demo-
cratic Party or an independent liberal group
not allied with either of the major parties.
A unification, regardless of party, in behalf
of liberal policies and candidates, is highly
desirable. But even if liberals within the
Republican party should organize, as like-
minded persons have done within the Dem-
ocratic Party, there would still be a cleav-
age between the liberals of the country that
would constitute a weakness.
The severe handicap under which pro-
gressives have labored in the United
States has always 'seen this division of
RECORDS
THE "POTPOURRI" sort of record album
S ontai j.cllan u works by one
composer ori cn0 x V workc y df-
ferent compoerS f Iein dn an
these days L:te' ,'collection is
an album of W : i.ns containing
some c ag r's miost played and best
known works the Pi elude to "Die Meister-
singer", "Forst Murmu s" from "Siegfried",
Preludes to Acts I and III from "Lohengrin,"
and the "Ri e of the Valkyries" from "Die
Walkure". Tho ecording is by Columbia
by the 'i- Symphony under Fritz
Reiner' . k' f album is probably an
attractive Beginning for the record buyer
who wans t obtain xiis favorite overtures,
excerpts, etc. without the expense of buying
the whole, often unfamiliar, work. For the
person who is interested in becoming better
acquainted with the whole work after a
passing acquaintance with the small ex-
cerpt, these collections of the very familiar
numbers will probably seem superfluous.
In contrast to the obviously designed for
mass consumption quality of the Wagner
album is another new Columbia release with
a much more limited appeal, Beethoven's
String Quintet in C, Op. 29 by the Budapest
String Quartet with Milton Katims, second
viola. It is an interesting example of early
Beethoven, the Beethoven of the "Moon-
light Sonata". While it is satisfactory from
the interpretive point of view, the recording
I listened to lacked clarity and was often
very scratchy.
-Patricia Kennett
General Library List
-. ,.._.,- -- n l ... ...f ~.. ?,Tn .

DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN

Letiters to the Editor..

11;

their strength between the two major par-
ties. This has made it easy for the two
party machines "to divide and conquer."
As a matter of fact, the machines have
not had to do the dividing. The liberals
have obligingly done it for them.
In 1912, Theodore Roosevelt tried to draw
together liberals regardless of party. He
nearly succeeded in doing this with the Pro-
gressive Party. Perhaps he might have at-
tained his goal if the nomination of Wood--
row Wilson by the Democrats had not kept
within that party most of the liberals that
it already contained. But, following 1912,
because Theodore Roosevelt would no long-
er carry the flag and because George W.
Perkins, who was in control of what re-
mained of the Progressive organization, was
eager to lead the remnants of the Progres-
sives into the Republican camp, the Pro-
gressives disintegrated. The late Robert M.
LaFollette, of Wisconsin, again raised the
liberal flag when he ran for President in
1924. He, too, failed. Later, with high
hearts, the liberals flocked t Franklin D.
Roosevelt in 1932. Now, they are not only
divided as between the Democratic and Re-
publican parties, they are separated among
themselves, with the Americans for Dem-
ocratic Action turning a stern face toward
Communism and the Progressive Citizens of
America apparently willing to be "only a
little communistic."
PERHAPS IT STILL is not too late for real
liberals to form an independent organ-
ization free of the dominance of either of
the major party machines. The domestic
objectives of the liberals are practically
identical. The real difference between the
two existing organizations is that the Pro-
gressive Citizens of America lacked the
courage, as it did the vision, to draw a sharp
line as to Communism. The only basis on
which liberalism can hope to maintain it-
self in this country is that of a determined
exclusion of Communism. The suggestion
made on January 4 that the Americans for
Democratic Action was an organization
working within the Democratic party, was
an unfortunate one which naturally drew
protests from some quarters and raised
doubts in others. This movement would
quickly lose its vitality if it became entang-
led with the Democratic machine, with its
poll tax states in the south and its corrupt
city machines in the north.
A political and social liberalism is a way
of thinking and hoping. What it needs
is some implementation for doing. This
need leads to the suggestion that has been
made of an organization that would main-
tain its identity independently of both par-
ty organizations., It would still be possible
for party Democrats, as well as for party
Republicans, to vote at the primaries of their
own parties, and they could later rally to
the support of progressive measures and men
as liberal-minded citizens.. In my judgment,
there is little hope of a liberal party rein-
carnating the Progressive Party that had
such a brilliant, if brief, career in 1912.
There is not likely to be a national third
party in the reasonably foreseeable future.
In hinting at such a possibility, Mr. Wal-
lace is holding out false hopes. I wish that
it might be otherwise. But since this can-
not be, it would be a pity to evoke a miser-
able mirage that inevitably would dash the
hopes of those engaged in trying to organ-
ize a third party, the failure of which would
leave them discouraged and politically list-
less for another generation.
(Copyright 1947 New York Post Corporation)
Modern Worker
It has been known for a very long time
that the modern industrial worker does not

Publication in The Daily Official
Bulletin is constructive notice to all
members of the University. Notices
for the Bulletin should be sent in
typewritten form to the office of the
Assistant to the President. Room 1021
Angel Hail, by 3:00 p.m. on the day
preceding publication (1:60 a.m. Sat-
urdays.)
SUNDAY, JANUARY 19, 1947
VOL LVII, No. 86
Notices
Members of the Faculty: Mr. R.
McAlester Lloyd, President of the
Teachers Insurance and Annuity
Association, will be on the campus
on Tuesday, January 21. Mr. Lloyd
will be in Rm. 1011, Angell Hall,
at 3:00 o'clock, for consultation
with members of the faculty who
wish to discuss with him questions
regarding their insurance or re-
tirement plans.
Alexander G. Ruthven
To All Veterans: Every veteran
enrolled at the University of Mich-
igan must file a Certification of
Absences for the Fall Semester,
1946, so that the Veterans Admin-
istration may have adequate basis
for paying subsistence and grant-
ing leave in the proper amount
when requested by the student.
Certification blanks will be avail-
able from 8:30 a.m. to noon and
from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. Monday
and Tuesday. Veterans should re-
port to their respective colleges at
the following places and should
leave their blanks at their college
office:
Literature, Science, and Arts,
Hall of University Hall; Engineer-
ing, 255 W. engineering; Gradu-
ate, Graduate School Office;
Law, Available with Registration
Material; Architecture and Design,
207 Architecture Bldg.; Pharmacy,
250 Chemistry; Business Adminis-
tration, 108 Tappan; Dentistry,
Secretary's Office Dentistry Build-
ing; Education, 1433 University
Elementary School; Forestry and
Conservation, 2045 Natural Sci-
ence; Music, 101 School of Music;
Nursing, 2036 University Hospital;
Public Health, Information Desk,
School of Public Health; Medicine,
123 W. Medical.
Alexander G. Ruthven
Student Tea: President and
Mrs. Ruthven will be at home to
students on Wednesday afternoon,
February 12, from 4 to 6 o'clock.
Student Accounts: Your atten-
tion is called to the following rules
passed by the Regents at their
meeting of February 28, 1936:
"Students shall pay all accounts
due the University not later than
the last day of classes of each se-
mester or summerrsession. Stu-
dent loans which are not paid or
renewed are subject to this regu-
lation; however, student loans
not yet due are exempt. Any un-
paid accounts at the close of busi-
ness on the last day of classes will
be reported to the Cashier of the
University and
"(a) All academic credits will
be withheld, the grades for the se-
mester or summer session just
completed will not be released, and
no transcript of credits will be is-
sued.
"(b) All students owing such
accounts will not be allowed to
register in any subsequent semes-
ter or summer session until pay-
ment has been made."
Herbert G. Watkins
Secretary
School of Education faculty will
meet Jan. 27, 4:15 p.m., UES Li-
brary.

School of Forestry and Conser-
vation:
All classes, 12 noon, Thurs., Jan.
30.
School of Music:
All classes, 5 p.m., FIri., Jan. 31.
College of Pharmacy:
All classes, 5 p.m., Fri., Jan. 31.
Graduate School:
All classes, 5 p.m., Fri., Jan. 31.
School of Public Health:
All classes, 5 p.m., Fri., Jan. 31.
School of Dentistry:
Freshman class, 5 p.m., Wed.,
Jan. 29;
Sophomore class, 12 noon, Fri.,
Jan. 31;
Junior Class, 10 a.m., Mon., Feb.'
3;
Senior class, 12 noon, Fri., Jan.
31;
Hygienists, First Year, 12 noon,
Tues., Jan. 28;
Hygienists, Second Year, 5 p.m.,
Fri., Jan. 31.
School of Education:
All classes, 5 p.m., Fri., Jan. 31.
Office of the Dean of Students
University Discipline Committee
Action:
At the meeting the University
Discipline Committee held on
January 8, 1947, the following ac-
tions were taken:
Sigma Phi Fraternity
An officer of Sigma Phi Fra-
ternity, having appeared before
the committee and having admit-
ted that his organization was guil-
ty of stealing Christmas trees, it
is ordered that the fraternity be
fined fifty dollars, payable to the
University Cashier, and that the
secretary be directed to publish
this order in the D. O. B.
Theta Chi and Theta Xi
Fraternities
Representatives of Theta Chi
and Theta Xi Fraternities, re-
spectively, havin appeared before
the Committee and having admit-
ted that the groups were guilty of
behavior unbecoming to gentle-
men, it is ordered that each fra-
ternity be fined fifty dollars, pay-
able to the University Cashier, and
that the secretary be directed to
publish this order in the D. O. B.
Action of the Administrative
Board, College of Literature, Sci-
ence and the Arts: A student in
the College of Literature, Science
and the Arts has been suspended
because she was found guilty of
having signed a library slip with a
fictitious name.
To Directors and Presidents of
Women's Residences:
Women's Hours for J-Hop
Week--End (Please Post)
1. Girls attending the J-Hop
dances have 2:30 a.m. permission
on February 7 and 8.
II. Girls attending approved
breakfast parties have 4 a.m. per-
mission on February 7 and 8.
111. The regular week-end rules
are in force for all other parties on
February 7 and 8 except those ar-
ranged by the J-Hop Committee
and approved by the Dean of Stu-
dents.
IV. Overnight permission to at-
tend house parties: Fraternities
are asked to submit to the Office of
the Dean of Women official lists
of the girls who have accepted in-
vitations to their house parties.
House directors may grant over-
night permission to these girls
after checking the fraternity list
in the Office of the Dean of Wom-
en.
Office of the Dean of Women
Dues collection for second sem-
ester Literary College seniors is
now underway. Prospective grad-
uates are urged to pay their dues
promptly in order to insure the
inclusion of their names on the
graduation list. Dues amounting
to $1.00 are to be sent to Barbara
Raymer, Finance Chairman, 407

North Ingalls. Dues will go to-
ward purchasing the traditional
gift to the University and will cov-
er the cost of senior class pictures.
Recommendations for Depart-
mental Honors: Teaching depart-
ments wishing to recommend ten-
tative February graduates from
the College of Literature, Science,
and the Arts, and the School of
Education for departmental hon-
ors should recommend such stu-
dents ina letter sent to the Reg-
istrar's Office, Rm. 4, University
Hall, by 4 p.m., Feb. 6.

EDITOR'S NOTE: No letter to the
editor will be printed unless signed
and written In good taste. Letters
over 300 words in length will be
shortened or omitted; in special in-
stances, they will be printed, at the
discretion of the editorial director.
* *
Monopoly'. . .
To the Editor:
In regard to the articles writ-
ten in the recent issues of the
Daily concerning Gach's "monop-
oly," especially that by Harry Le-
vine, I wish to submit my views.
First let me take up the so-call-
ed monopoly. As I understand the
term, a monopoly is established by
forcing competitors out of busi-
ness and preventing newcomers
from entering the field. Has Bob
Gach done this? I say he hasn't.
The field is open to anyone who
cares to undertake the task.
Secondly there have been com-
plaints about his prices. If you
recall back in 1942 and up to 1945
the price was 75 cents for the first
picture and 25 cents for each addi-
tional picture. A fair price by any
standard. Since then prices have
risen in every line of purchasing
and selling and consequently Bob
has had to raise his prices to meet
the increase in costs of his ma-,
terials. This is only to be expect-
ed. To continue with this idea,
Bob Gach has had to increase his
staff which is an added cost. On
top of all this he has to make a
living for himself as everyone who
is in business does.
Thirdly the J-Hop Committee, I
believe is bringing in some photo-
graphers from out of town to take
pictures at that dance. I sincere-
ly hope that they can offer as good
quality as Bob has and at the
same prices, but I doubt if they
can.
These students who were elected
under the suspicion of a shady
election have no authority to pry
into the affairs of a private busi-
ness firm which is not connected
with the University. Just who
are they that they can demand to
see the books and decide what is
profit?
I hereby suggest that the Stu-
dent Legislature make a public
apology to Bob Gach. That is the
least they can do.
-Kenneth E. Wandel
Liason
To the editor:
A SHORT TIME ago, while on
Christmas vacation in De-
troit, I attended a Christmas par-
ty in the Union Guardian Build-
ing. While there, I was introduc-
ed to a young man whose job (as
I learned through conversation
with him) was "liason between
the Veteran's Administration and
the Unio Gurdian Building
maintenance department." To
clarify this title, let me give an
illustration. You are an officer
working for the V.A. in the Un-
ion Guardian Building. A light
burns out in your office. You do
not call the building superinten-
dant; you call this chap whom I
have mentioned, who notifies his
secretary (she was also at the
party), who relays the informa-
tion to the building superinten-
dant. This gentleman, we may
assume, takes action upon the
matter, since he does not work for
the government. I do not know
what my young friend earns nor
do I know what his secretary
earns-but you can imagine my
comments and the comments of
my schoolmates upon learning
that the V. A. is going to take one
dollar and fifty cents of my leave
subsistence pay in their newly
iniiated "economy drive."
-Charles Cline

Inspection
To The Editor:
O ESTABLISH my claim as
the first to apply for the po-
sition mentioned below, may I re-
quest that the following be pub-
lished as an open letter?
To the Director
Local V.A. Outpost
Dear Sir:
This letter may seem a bit ear-
ly, but I realize that the job for
which I am applying will be at-
tractive to many and you will be
swamped with applications.
Please understand, Sir, that I
am not a crystal-ball gazer nor a
tea-leaves fan, but just a hard-
working veteran trying to get
along. However, being very in-
terested in anything that affects
my pocketbook, I keep a weather
eye on the trends of policy in the
V.A. and with no great stretch of
the imagination I see that the
present course will lead you to a
shortage of help with such special
talents as I am offering..

It is perfectly clear that the
present regulations, namely, fil-
ing income reports, benefits on
the basis of credit hours earned,
and filing reports of cuts, lead di-
rectly to stationing inspectors at
the doors of the various Univer-
sity buildings to check the veter-
ans' general appearance, to make
sure the ties are straight, the but-
tons buttoned, and the space be-
hind the ears is clean. After all,
a veteran has no right to reflect
discredit on the good men Who
happen to be in the same veter-
anship through no fault of their
own.
As to my qualifications for the
job, I wish to call to your atten--
tion that at one time I was k
cleanliness inspector at a public
swimming pool. Then too, my
wide acquaintance among MPs
while in the Army taught me how
to be arrogant and officious.
Hoping my application reaches
you first,
I am
-P. H. Arnett
Masses
To The Editor:
IN HIS LETTER in Sunday's
Daily Mr. Kawas erroneously
asserts that those favoring a Jew-
ish State in Palestine have argued
"that the Arabs welcome Zion-
ism," To my knowledge this
statement has never appeared in
any well-known publication.
To use the term "Arabs" wth-
out qualification, is to be guilty
of an insupportable generaliza-
tion. The great masses of Arabs,
the workers and peasants, cannot
arbitrarily be grouped around with
the rich effendis-or land-owners.
The former constitute the bulk of
the Moslem population and there
are innumerable sources which af-
firm their welcome of Jewish col-
onization in Palestine. That the
small aristocratic class, and their
organs of expression-the Ar b
parties and newspapers-have vi-
lently opposed Zionism, all objec-
tive pro-Zionists have willingly
admitted. Where the riots, strikes,
and demonstrations, to which Ms.
Kawas has alluded, did take placi,
the instigator was either the ef+
fendis, or the British Government'
and Colonial Office. The Arab
masses did not initiate such ac-
tions.
Mr. Kawas' emotional tone in
his two closing paragraphs is a
little touching, but unless one ac-
celits the false premise that Pal-
estine belongs to the Arabs and
is the focal point of their civiliza-
tion, traditions, and language, it
can have no cogent validity.
-Richard P. Dee
* * *
On Daily Editorial . .
To the Editor:
We believe that the Editors of
The Daily showed extremely poor
taste in attacking John W.
Shockly, the member of the
Board in Control of Student Pub-
lications who was elected last fall
on a program calling for a change
in the Daily's editorial policy.
-Stuart G. Kent
and 14 others
EDITOWS NOTE: Mr. Shokley'
campaign slogan and statement
dealt with his interpretation of the
political beliefs of the staff mem
bers and brought the charge of
"nepotism" against the staff. The
Daily's editorial "policy" is that
any staff member is eligible t
write editorials of his own choice

~1

Edward W. Blakeman
Counselor in Religious Education

HAPPENS ...
0A Confused Cam pus
SITTING IN THE Angell Hall smoking
room the other day, we were amazed to
hear a very grown-up, masculine voice con-
fide to his companion that he had been
smoking on the sly for two years and that
next year he was going to buy a pipe.
Our confusion was further increased when
the owner of the voice turned out to be a
young man well into his twenties. The mys-
tery was solved, however, when we saw an
open copy of "Ah, Wilderness" lying in his
lap.
O UR ROOM-MATE being a physical ed-
ucation major, we were perusing one of
her textbooks the other night in the hope
of developing a common basis for intellec-
tual discussions. In the Official Basketball
Guide, 1946-47 edition, with Official Rules,
we found this interesting item:
"The ball for basketball shall be round".
We've always used a spherical one.
* * * *
Contributions to this column are by all mem-
bers of The Daily staff, and are the respon-
sibility of the editorial director.

J

Automobile Regulation, be-
tween semesters: The following
schedule will govern the lifting of
the Automobile Regulation for
students in the various schools
and colleges of the University. Ex-
ceptions will not be made for in-
dividuals who complete their work
in advance of the last day of class
examinations, and all students en-
rolled in the following depart-
ments will be required to adhere
strictly to this schedule. The
regulation will go back into ef-
fect at 8 a.m. Monday, February
10, the first day of the spring se-
mester.
College of Literature, Science
and the Arts:
All classes, 5 p.m., Fri., Jan. 31.
College of Engineering:
All classes, 5 p.m., Fri., Jan. 31.
Law School:
Freshman class, 6 p.m., Thurs.,
Jan. 30;
Junior class, 11:30 a.m., Fri.,
Jan. 31;
Senior class, 4:30 p.m., Tues.,
Jan. 28.
Medical School:
Sophomore class, 12 noon, Fri.,
Jan. 31;
All other classes, 5 p.m., Fri.,
Jan. 31.
College of Architecture and De-
sign:
All classes, 5 p.m., Fri., Jan. 31.

Lectures
Lecture postponed: The Michi-
gan Alumnae Club of Ann Arbor
announces postponement of lec-
ture by Judge Florence E. Allen,
scheduled for Wed., Jan. 22. Date
will be anounced later.
Academic Notices
EM2a students: Laboratory re-
ports have been rearranged by sec-
(Continued on Page 8)

Fifty-Seventh Year
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Mary Brush ...........Associate Editor
Ann Kutz ............Associate Editor
Paul Harsha..........Associate Editor
Clark Baker .............Sports Editor
Des Howarth ..Associate Sports Editor
Jack Martin ...Associate Sports Editor
Joan Wilk.. ......Women's Editor
Lynne Ford .Associate Women's Editor
Business Staff
Robert E. Potter ....Businesg Mangu
Evelyn Mills
......Associate Business Manages
Janet Cork Associate Business Manage=
Telephone 23-24-1
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